Showing posts with label El Nuevo Diario. Show all posts
Showing posts with label El Nuevo Diario. Show all posts

Thursday, May 3, 2007

Nifonged in Nicaragua: Exclusive Eric Volz Photograph

LieStoppers has obtained a digital image of a photograph taken by one of Eric Volz's attorneys the day after his arrest in Nicaragua for the rape and murder of his former girlfriend, Doris Ivanez Jimenez.

Eric Volz November 24, 2006
Photograph Taken by One of Volz's Attorneys

Curiously, the photograph taken by Eric Volz's attorney is quite different than the photograph recently published by Nicaraguan tabloid, El Nuevo Diario, as part of it's ongoing effort to support the wrongful conviction of Volz while justifying the propaganda campaign it has waged against Volz since his arrest in November.

Photograph Published By El Nuevo Diario on April 1, 2007
Purportedly Taken by Nicaraguan Police on November 23, 2006

The photograph taken by Volz's attorney also varies greatly from the image published in an anti-Volz video that appears on YouTube.

Screen Capture Taken From Anti-Volz Propaganda Video

Both El Nuevo Diario and NicaraguanFilms, the anonymous user who posted the anti-Volz video to YouTube, claim that the images they have published are photographs taken by Nicaraguan Police following Volz's arrest on November 23, 2006.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Nifonged in Nicaragua: Volz Appeal Delayed

Nicaraguan newspaper El Nuevo Diario is reporting today that the appeal of Eric Volz’s wrongful conviction for the rape and murder of Doris Jiménez has been delayed. Contrary to US reports of an anticipated resolution to the appeal by the end of the month, El Nuevo Diario reports that an appeal hearing may be several weeks away. Confirming that the 508 page case file has been transferred to the appeals court, the Nicaraguan newspaper explains that the file has not yet been reviewed by the three judges assigned to evaluate the appeal. According to El Nuevo, a preliminary review to determine whether the case is subject to appeal must be conducted before a hearing must be scheduled. This pending review, and a backlog of cases, appears to be the cause for the delay.

Last week, we cited a report in the Nashville Tennessean that indicated a decision on the appeal was anticipated before the end of April.
The Nashville Tennessean is reporting that a hearing on Eric Volz appeal of his false conviction for the rape and murder of former girlfriend Doris Ivania Jimenez is expected to take place by the end of the month. According to the article by Brad Schrade, papers initiating the appeal process were filed yesterday with the Nicaraguan Supreme Court. Within six days of filing, a hearing must be held with a decision mandated within five days of the hearing.

Tennessean:

Former Nashville resident and Hillwood High graduate Eric Volz, who is imprisoned in Nicaragua on a murder conviction, has filed an appeal with the country's supreme court and a decision could come by the end of the month, a family spokeswoman said.

Volz is convicted of murdering an ex-girlfriend last November, but his family and friends say the American has been railroaded in a gross miscarriage of justice. The murder of Doris Ivania Jimenez occurred in San Juan, but Volz was more than two hours away in the city of Managua at the time of the murder, said Melissa Campbell, a spokeswoman for Volz's family, who still live in Nashville.

The case has drawn national attention with reports in the Wall Street Journal, People magazine and on The Today Show. Campbell said Nicaragua's appeal process requires a case be heard within six days after the papers are filed, and a decision on the appeal must come within five days after the hearing. Papers were filed today, she said, which means Volz and his family are hopeful the high court will render a decision by the end of the month.

"He's hanging in there,” Campbell said of Volz, who is 27. "He's mentally strong and hopeful. He's incredibly encouraged by letters coming in from the Web site."

Volz was sentenced to 30 years in the Central American country's prison system following his February conviction. He had around 10 people offer sworn statements providing an alibi at the time of the murder, but the judge considered the lone testimony of an eyewitness who claimed they saw Volz near the girlfriend's clothing shop at the time of the murder.

Today, El Nuevo Diario clarifies the appeals process in an interview with Armando Mejía, secretary of the Nicaraguan Court of Appeals.
The appeal of the sentence of Eric Stanley Volz, condemned to 30 years [in prison] for the rape and murder of ex-fiancèe, Doris Ivania Jiménez, arrived last week to the Penal Room of the Court of Appeals of the South Circumscription in Granada.

Thus the secretary of this Room confirmed, Armando Mejía, who communicated as well that the file -- coming from the Room of Hearings of Rivas-- has not yet been studied by the magistrates of this court, [and this is the] reason why the case could taking several weeks before being considered.

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Mejía explained that still the procedure must be confirmed done of the appeal, and if they are expressed and they answered the offenses by each one of the procedural parts, and to verify the tests non-admitted by the Judge of District that the sentence dictated, or to determine if it is necessary to remake tests.

“The court first studies if [the] requirements of appeal [are met]. If one appealed in time and if the sentence is appealable. If the appeal is transacted, a "auto de radicación" is [ordered] or the appeal by the circumstances is [denied if the requirements are not met],” explained Mejía.

Once the court has dictated the "auto de radicación," it summons itself to a hearing in a period of five days, and [afterwards] the court will have a term of [an]other five days to dictate its [judgment].

“But the court does not [have discretion of when to schedule] the hearing once the "auto de radicación" has been [ordered], there is a term to dictate to that [scheduling], a term established by the law, but also it is necessary to [understand] that the court --made up of three magistrates-- is studying a series of other files,” indicated the secretary.

The file of Volz --composed of two volumes that add 508 [pages] -- [first] it will have to be read and to be analyzed by each one of the magistrates of the court before emitting a [decision].

The Court of Appeals of this circumscription is [composed of] Francisco Roberto Rodríguez Baltodano, Alejandro Estrada Sequeira y Ángela Gross, president of the Room.

“The three must see and study the file first to emit a [decision on a hearing], [and then] returns to be analyzed by they themselves to see if it is ratified by the three, or if there are dissident votes”, concluded Mejía
The balance of the article in today's El Nuevo Diario, which includes a description of the anticipated defense arguments, can be read in Spanish by clicking here: Spanish; or in English as translated roughly by Google's language tools here: English.
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Sunday, April 8, 2007

Nifonged in Nicaragua: El Nuevo Diario Fights Back

Originally published at the Main Blog April 3, 2007

In response to recent coverage by The Wall Street Journal, The Today Show , and several other US media outlets, the Snooze Room South, El Nuevo Diario, has begun to fight back against the campaign to expose the Nifonging of American Eric Volz in Nicaragua. In two articles reminiscent of the Snooze Room’s rebuttal of the 60 Minutes expose of Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong’s hijacking of the Hoax, the Nicaraguan newspaper that led the call for the false conviction of Volz continues its propaganda campaign in a fashion that would make Bob Ashley proud.
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The most recent article entitled, “Pure Lies of the Volz Family," challenges the assertion that Volz's life has been threatened while also questioning statements that have suggested Volz was wrongfully convicted.The spokesman of the National Penitentiary System, Oscar Molina, denied that internal of nationality the Mexican-North American, Eric Stanley Volz, outside threatened of death by other inmates, and that even is within the penitentiary with its own guards of security, as they have informed it average into press of the United States.
"The spokesman of the National Penitentiary System, Oscar Molina, denied that the Mexican-North American, Eric Stanley Volz, has been death threatened by other inmates, and that he is within the penitentiary with his own security guards, as has been reported by the United States press.

“That is a total falsification”, expressed Molina, who assured that “we have not known of threats to Mr. Volz, nor does he have a personal guard. He is in a common cell where there are other individuals monitoring the penitentiary center,” he added.

Meanwhile, Mrs. Mercedes Alvarado, mother of the young person assassinated by Volz, the Nicaraguan Julio Martín Chamorro, and another person still unknown, described as a desperate and unfortunate way the massive manipulation of the average Americans, where incoherences are published, things that do not have anything to do with the process and only make Eric Stanley Volz look good.

“But this is absurd and the manipulation of the average Americans is seen, who only now are into this case; and of Mrs. Maggie Anthony, who in her eagerness to release to her son has unleashed this campaign which is devoid of all credibility, to make her son the victim rather than the criminal that he is,” affirmed Alvarado.

Pure falsification

Molina was surprised by the reports of the North American media, that indicate that Stanley Volz has a personal guard who protects him from the rest of inmates.

“I do not know to what they are talking about, our headquarters our has no personal guards,” explained Molina, who tried to make sense of the information, indicating that perhaps they meant when [Eric] Stanley Volz or any other prisoner is taken from one place to another one, then it is done by one or two civil employees of the National Penitentiary System. “The rules establishes that a prisoner cannot travel alone from one place to another one,” reminded Molina.

So why do they not say the truth?

Through the Internet and North American media, it is questioned whether the judgment that condemned Volz and Chamorro was a corrupt and political process, and one that weighed more what was published about him in Nicaraguan media; but, in addition, they manipulate politically when indicating that Alvarado is an activist of the Sandinista Front, that received endorsement of the government party to mobilize great amounts of people to the courts to request the sentence of Volz.

The mother of the victim stated to El Nuevo Diario that she does not have anything against the Americans, and assured that she would had acted the same if the murderer of her daughter, Doris Ivania Jiménez Alvarado, had been a Chinese Communist, Cuban Venezuelan or another. “What they did to my daughter was an atrocious murder and those who did it had to pay,” she indicated.

Alvarado questioned that the average North Americans do not publish the fact that the defense lawyers are recognized militant ones of the Sandinista Front. “So that Doña Maggie does not say to them that her son's lawyers are Ramón Rojas, who handles cases for Daniel Ortega, and Fabric Gómez, legal assistant of the political secretary of the FSLN of Rivas? So why don't they say that if it is true that it was a political judgment?" she asked.

Nothing that to see

NBC reporter, Kerry Sanders, in his video news article on the Internet, indicates that the family of Volz has fear of the threats that the criminal has received in the prison, but Molina denies it fully.

“Threats of death to Mr. Volz? We have not received nor known no fact and information that is directed towards that, nor no offense has occurred the prevailed one of freedom,” he indicated.

“I do not know anyone that does not reveal when he is in danger, he says it so that they protect him or they pursue, there does not exist such a threat,” he reaffirmed.

Violated and assassinated

As one remembers, the crime against the young person Doris Ivania happened on November 21, 2005 in the afternoon, and the scene was the small store of clothes that had the contiguous victim to the South flank of the municipal market of San Juan of the South. There the young person was violated and soon assassinated, according to the sentence, by her fiancè, Eric Stanley Volz, Chamorro Lopez and another person.

Both were found guilty of the brutal crime of passion on February 16 of this year, and were condemned to the maximum penalty that exists in Nicaragua, 30 years.

At the present time, the case is in appeal in the courts of the city of Granada.
The second recent El Nuevo Diario article, "Enormous Media Campaign of the Volz Family," attacks the Volz family's efforts to bring media attention to their son’s wrongful conviction by suggesting they have falsely portrayed the evidence, the trial, and the victim's mother. The article further assails the Volz family by suggesting that their efforts endanger Nicaraguans in the US.
Enormous media campaign of the Volz family

Video on the Internet made by the large television networks of the US interested in the case and they make Volz as the victim "The Message is Clear: there is an innocent American in a jail of a communist country", said a US Citizen A call to the citizens to demand justice through the senators and congressman, and to make a coarse of political manipulation

by Martín Mulligan/ Granada

Eric Stanley Volz and his prison sentence of 30 years for the rape and murder of Doris Ivania Jiménez.

The Mexican-American Eric Stanley Volz and his prison sentence of 30 years for the rape and murder of Doris Ivania Jiménez, has awoke an aggressive media campaign on the Internet, that has resulted in the newspapers and the television of the United States, connoting the fact as an unjust sentence against an American citizen "in a country governed by the left"

National media threw firewood to the fire because of a video risen on the Internet by the family of Volz, the national American Network NBC presented this past Monday a report of more than eight minutes: "He was condemned unjustly?" In this, Maggie Anthony, the mother of Volz, and their lawyer in the United States, Jacqueline Becerra, expose the case as a judgment blurred of corruption, lack of tests and agitated by the national media toward a feeling anti US Citizen.

"We are not seeking sympathy --the evidence is clear -- he was in Managua at the moment of the crime", said in the program by his lawyer, who alleges that the judge refused seven of the witnesses, as well as the records of the calls registered by the telephone antennae that shows that Volz was two hours of distance when the homicide occurred.

Another of the arguments by Becerra was to declare that the judge was left to carry by speculations, therefore "we know that, of all the evidences collected by the Police, none connected Volz with this crime"

Screen of image and content

In the report it is confirmed that the defense of Volz prepares an appeal to the prison sentence, but the family has fear of supposed threats that the defendant has received in prison.

"Eric has a personal guard to protect him from the other inmates, because there is a fear that they will try to murder him for the prison sentence that they gave him of Rape and murder", the reporter of NBC says, Kelly Sanders

Political Manipulation

Subsequently --in an interview with Mercedes Alvarado, mother of the victim -- the reporter describes to Alvarado as a communal leader and activist of the sandinista party , to whom he asks her: Were you the one whom created the mobs against Eric? "No, by no means, Sanders", responds Alvarado, while behind her a poster of the campaign with the image of the chosen president is observed, Daniel Ortega.

The report does not mention the use of the illegal weapons that the 14 men of the personal security of Volz carried, nor the Nicaraguan Julio Martín Chamorro López, which was also condemned to 30 years of the same crime.

Nevertheless, the mother of Volz indicates that, among the four defendants, beforehand, the national media took "chivo expiatorio" to her son, causing violent reactions among the settlers, that finally resulted in the verdict of the judicial authorities.

Other American medias also have written the history, among them, The Wall Street Journal, with headquarters in New York, which also shows Alvarado as a political activist of the FSLN, and that conducted the local population to the courts to claim justice for the death of her daughter.

On the other hand, during the judgment, the newspaper expressed that although the defense, Fabbrith Gómez, appealed before the judge the story of a witness whom is an alcoholic, on the contrary the judge permitted him to declare that he saw Volz leave the store of Doris, during the time that the Police registered the occurrence of the crime.

Video on the Internet asks for justice through the senators and congressman of the US

"Injustice anywhere is a threat for the justice everywhere", by Martin Luther King, Jr., is the epilogue with the one that created the video that the family of Volz put on "You Tube" the most visited place on the Internet

Messages and Reactions

Among many of the messages, can be read reactions of this type: "I am nica-American and this gives me pain in my stomach to see what is happening there (Nicaragua) with the Nicaraguan government, under the leadership of Daniel Ortega, who is friend of Chávez and Castro, that are oppressive governments of their own people, therefore they are corrupt governments and have always been anti US Citizens." Among others, messages read as: "If such a situation is happening in Nicaragua with the Americans, then we should put Nicaraguans in the United States in prison." Reserving her identity, EL NUEVO DIARIO consulted an American that has been monitoring this media campaign, whom by the tone of the situation, considers that the family of Volz expects to exercise with the media pressure and call attention to the Nicaraguan government.

"By the circumstance of that they are involving the senators and congressman, I believe that the family of Volz thinks that if the government of Nicaragua sees the entire world has seen this judgment, perhaps they will change it and take letters in the matter."

"And I believe that the message is clear. There is an innocent American in a Banana Republic jail, and that this is creating feelings against the Nicaraguans in the United States, there all believe that Volz is innocent", declared the interviewed.
The recent articles follow closely El Nuevo Diario’s pre-trial coverage in tone and slant. The following is a very rough translation of an article that appeared on December 3, 2006. Despite the similarity in style and substance, it was not written by Samiha Khanna.
The CRIME that shook San Juan del Sur

Suspicion of betrayal is what apparently motivated the horrible crime against the beautiful and likeable young woman of San Juan del Sur, Doris Ivania Jiménez, 25, who, due to her popularity and participation in beauty contests, was very well-known in this harbor city. * A young man of San Juan appeared in the life of the victim, and apparently he was the motive of the atrocious fact, since the supposed killer was jealous. * Grandmother and friend of the victim agree this must cause reflection for girls, so that they do not take foreigners as lovers.

SAN JUAN del Sur, RIVAS - Perhaps this “sirenita” of San Juan del Sur never imagined that starting a relation with the Mexican-gringo Eric Stanley Volz, 27, would culminate in another women assassinated by his kind in our country.

According to the Public Ministry Department of Rivas, Stanley Volz was the mastermind of the crime that also involved Nelson Antonio Lopez Dangla, 24, Julio Martin Chamorro, 29, and Armando Llanes, 20.

The crime that has affected the citizenship of San Juan del Sur took place on the afternoon of 21 of November, and the scene was the small store that Doris had on the south end of the market in this tourist municipality.

Violated by two

According to the accusation, Stanley Volz arrived at the place in company from the involved others, and being inside they transferred to Doris Ivania to a room, where they tied her feet and hands and placed a rag in her mouth.

Soon, they undressed her and the foreigner vaginally raped her, and Julio did the same supposedly, but the Office of the public prosecutor is awaiting the biological results to determine for sure who participated in the rape.

All indications are that while the rape was perpetrated, Doris Ivania died slowly by asphyxiation, and when they found out she was dead victimizers dressed her and covered her body with sheets.

The suspects left the store taking men’s clothes, to make people think that it was a robbery, but the Police managed to put “the pieces” of the crime and with the suspects, and in the case of Nelson and Julio, both confessed and admitted to the participation of the foreigner, who had jeopardized himself by paying 5 thousand dollars to them both for their participation.

Grandmother calls for reflection

For doña Jacinta Lanzas, grandmother of Doris Ivania, this fact must serve as a reminder to many young people who for want of gifts first accept and then maintain love affairs with foreigners, mainly because this harbor city, as well as the colonial city of Granada, is frequented often by people of many countries who stay to live here permanently or temporarily.

“With these people much caution should be taken, because nothing of them is known, nothing of their past, and in this case I always had a feeling of something bad, he never felt good to me (Stanley Volz), perhaps it was the grandmother blood, that gave me this feeling”, commented the old one.

Gabriela Sobalvarro, 26, considered one of the closest friends of Doris Ivania, also agreed that the young people of San Juan del Sur must take great care when accepting a relationship with foreigners, “and this tragedy must serve as a reminder”, she explained.

Also, she indicated that Doris Ivania was a very friendly young person, and she stated she [Doris] commented to her that after culminating her university studies she would study estilismo, [?] because she wanted to dedicate herself to that work and her store. At the present time the victim was in last year’s contest of Administration of Companies in the Upoli-Rivas.

According to Gabriela, her friend met Stanley Volz when she worked at the restaurant “Roca Mar”. “There they met because Stanley Volz worked for the good company `Century 21´, that was in front of the restaurant, and that was how they initiated this relation”

Family and friend knew of the harassment

According to relatives of Doris Ivania, the relationship existed for mre than a year but they detailed that in these last days the things apparently did not go well, “because he watched over her too much and he harassed her, came to the house after midnight and took her by force, and apparently the relationship was losing interest for her”, expressed Elena Alvarado Lanzas, aunt of the assassinated young person.

The unbearable jealousy of Stanley Volz also was known to Gabriela, since she commented to El Nuevo Diario that Doris Ivania told her of this. Also, the decedent recently revealed to her that the young Armando Llanes, 20, was enamored with her and had invited her to a hotel that his father owned in San Juan River, where he is from, and this apparently finished driving the Mexican-gringo crazy.

However, it’s strange that Llanes also was accused by the Office of the public prosecutor, although the his relatives indicate that he does not even know the foreigner and on the day of the crime was not in San Juan del Sur.

He attended funeral

The day of the candle [funeral], Stanley Volz appeared to mourn his lover, and according to Doña Jacinta, stayed for minutes upon the coffin, crying, and at that moment she knew that he was the assassin, although the rest of the family still wanted to wait for the police investigations.

Stanley Volz also traveled to the cemetery of San Juan del Sur to part with his beloved, but once the funeral ended he was arrested by the Police when he left the cemetery, and as a result of the investigations he was formally charged with rape and murder.

It must be noted that Doris Ivania was the second of five children of Mrs. Mercedes Alvarado, who now watches the progress the Police and the Office of the public prosecutor are making, since she, like the rest of her family, she wants the Mexican-gringo and his pals punished, and she is waiting for what they will do.

In this sense the next step is the initial hearing that will be made this next Wednesday in the Court of Penal District of Hearings of Rivas. There it will be determined if sufficient evidence exists to send to the defendants to trial.
For added hysteria and heightened public condemnation, the article above was headed by this grisly crime scene photo:



Additional information on the Nifonging of Eric Volz:

Nifonged in Nicaragua - Eric Volz

Originally published at the Main Blog March 20, 2007

"Send out the Gringo. We'll kill him!"

On November 23, 2006, Nashville native Eric Volz was arrested in San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua for the rape and murder of his ex-girlfriend, Doris Ivanez Jimenez. Despite conclusive evidence that he was in Managua over two hours away at the time of the crime, the twenty-seven year old publisher of El Puente Magazine, was convicted last month, following a three day trial. Mr. Volz was sentenced to serve thirty years in “El Modelo” prison, the maximum sentence allowed, after Judge Ivette Toruño Blanco threw out all the defense evidence, which included testimony of multiple alibi witnesses, cell phone and computer records, signed credit voucher, and more. Also disallowed were the findings of the prosecution’s forensic expert, who testified that none of the physical evidence (over 100 hairs found on and around the victim, as well as blood, saliva, semen, and footprints) matched Volz. The parallels between the Volz case and the Hoax, ranging from evidence of actual innocence to improper extra-judicial statements by the prosecutor and the community hysteria fueled by inflammatory media coverage, are all eerily similar.
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Evidence of an Alibi
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In Durham, District Attorney Mike Nifong, after initially refusing to view Reade Seligmann's alibi evidence, reinvented the Hoax to change a thirty minute alleged assault into a five to ten minute event, after conclusive documentation (time-stamped photographs, ATM and restaurant receipts, cell phone records, and witness affidavits supporting the alibi) were publicized. Later, in another revision, the time and duration of the assault would again change in an apparent effort to beat the alibi.
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In Nicaragua, prosecutor Maria Esperanza Peña would disregard ten signed depositions from witnesses who verified that Volz was in another city, cell phone records, instant messages, and a signed credit voucher. Judge Blanco would later disallow six of the alibi witnesses from testifying, before throwing out the testimony of the remaining four witnesses as being refuted “very bravely” by another witness who claimed that he did not see Mr. Volz when delivering a rental car. In the tradition of Nifong, Maria Esperanza Peña would also alter the theory of the crime to fit the alibi.
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Of the change, the local media cheerleader, El Nuevo Diario [a/k/a the Snooze Room South] would gleefully proclaim:

“With this version the Office of the public prosecutor tries to consolidate its accusation against Volz and once and for all to annul his alibis of being in Managua the day of the crime.”

The Friends of Eric Volz website offers meticulous details of Mr. Volz’s alibi for the time the crime occurred:
Statement of Facts in Connection with Eric Volz' Whereabouts
on November 21, 2006

Doris Ivanez Jimenez was murdered on Tuesday, November 21, 2006, between 11:45 am and 1:00 pm, inside a clothing store she owned, Sol Fashion, in San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua.

On the day of her murder, Eric Volz was over two (2) hours away in Managua. The proof that Eric was in Managua and innocent of this crime is conclusive. Many witnesses have given written statements and will testify that Eric was in Managua on the day of the murder. These statements are available to anyone who would like to review them. In addition to these many eyewitnesses, no physical evidence exists that would connect Eric to this murder.

.Throughout the evening of November 20, 2006, Eric was in Managua at the house where he lived. Eric's house also serves as the offices of EP magazine, a bilingual Central American magazine. Eric awoke there the morning of November 21, 2006, and entered the office area at around 9:15 am. The housekeeper, a security guard and no fewer than five EP workers were there at the time, saw Eric, and have given written statements confirming this fact. Eric's defense counsel has these written statements, which are available for anyone to review.
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At around 10:30 am, Eric received a visit from Maria Mercedes, who works at Etica y Transparencia, a non-profit organization. Maria had been on the cover of the launch issue of EP. Maria Mercedes brought along a friend and they met with Eric at the offices for about half an hour, until approximately 11:00 am.
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Around 11:30 am, Eric met with Ricardo Castillo, a potential contributing editor who is a journalist working with diverse foreign media including the BBC of London and America Economia. Several EP workers observed the meeting with Castillo. This meeting also included a telephone conference call with Castillo and a business contact in Atlanta, Georgia (USA), Nick Purdy.
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This 54-minute conference call ended at 1:15 pm and is documented by phone records that are available to anyone who wishes to review them. Also available are Nick Purdy's personal notes and instant messages (IM) from Eric showing that in total the two were engaged in intensive, back and forth business communications from approximately 9:21 am until 2:07 pm. In addition to these telephone records, cell phone records for Eric's cell phone also confirm Eric's use of his cell phone in Managua that day.

Eric then had lunch with Mr. Castillo and an EP employee at the same house in Managua. The lunch, prepared by the housekeeper, Martha Aguirre, was witnessed by other EP colleagues. Castillo left the house around 1:30 pm. Mr. Castillo and Mr. Purdy have provided written statements that are also available for anyone's review.
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Eric was at his house in Managua with at least five people when he received the tragic news that Doris was dead. Around that same time, 2:30 pm, yet another witness arrived, a hair stylist who had been previously scheduled to be there. She, too, saw Eric at the house in Managua.
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At about 3 pm, Eric rented a car, as he had done many other times, to get to San Juan del Sur and help Doris' family. Although Eric had a car in Managua, the rental vehicle was better suited to pass slow traffic on the road to San Juan. The car was delivered by the rental agency to the Managua house. Eric did not meet with the rental car staff himself. One of his employees brought the rental car credit vouchers inside the house for Eric to sign. Eric's Nicaraguan counsel has copies of the vouchers showing that Eric signed the credit voucher for the car. Cell phone records show that Eric was using his cell phone in the greater Managua area until 4:31 pm that afternoon. On his way to San Juan del Sur, Eric went to Rivas to pick up Doris' father, Ivan Jimenez. They then proceeded to San Juan del Sur where Eric assisted the family with Doris' funeral arrangements and attended her funeral.
Physical Evidence
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In Durham, police and prosecutors initially expressed certainty that DNA evidence would tie the suspects to the crime. When DNA evidence exonerated the suspects, District Attorney Mike Nifong would proceed with indictments regardless and attempt to downplay the significance of the lack of physical evidence in the media and in court filings.

In Nicaragua, prosecutor Peña would initially speak hopefully about biological tests, then decry the delay in receiving the results, then publicly and falsely indicate that forensic testing pointed to Volz. At trial, Judge Blanco would disqualify the testing and testimony of the prosecution’s expert witness - Noel Martín Corea. Although Mr. Corea found that scientific testing of blood, hair, pubic hair, saliva, and semen did not match Mr. Volz, the judge ruled the results as “not being conclusive” on the incredible basis that Mr. Corea did not know what he analyzed and couldn’t read his own reports. In tossing the evidence, Judge Blanco ruled that it neither favored nor incriminated the defendant. Blanco would also disqualify a footprint expert’s findings as not conclusive.
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Witness Credibility, or lack thereof.
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In Durham, charges have been brought with no evidence other than the word of an accuser devoid of credibility and despite a mountain of evidence that disproves her claims.

In Nicaragua, charges were brought, and convictions secured, solely on the word of the suspect who was originally charged with the crime. At the time of his arrest, Nelson Antonio López Danglas, an admitted drug addict and convicted criminal, was found to have scratches on his body and injuries to his penis, but was later inexplicably exonerated by prosecutor Peña. During the trial, Dangla, apparently testifying while under the influence, was the only witness who placed Volz at the scene of the crime and not in Managua.
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Rumors of Bribes
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In Durham, Clyde Yancey, a/k/a Cousin Jakki, would fuel the Hoax with a tale of a $2,000,000 offer to drop the charges. Despite a Durham police investigation that debunked the rumor, media pundits Wendy Murphy, Georgia Goslee and Cash Michaels would continue to promote it.
In Nicaragua, Mercedes Alvarado would use her close ties to local journalists to wage a media war against Volz that included a tale of an $1,000,000 offer, allegedly made on behalf of the defendant, incredibly, by the attorney of an uncharged and unrelated suspect. Alvarado used the rumor to incite a courthouse mob and was allowed to testify to the unsubstantiated offer at trial..
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Media Frenzy
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In and around Durham, the Hoax was hyped by inflammatory press coverage that presumed the suspects guilty. They emphasized the "brutal" and "horrific" thirty minute assault, included definitive statements from District Attorney Nifong about racist motives and a police spokesman describing a, now known to be fictional, wall of silence. They publicized a potentially life-threatening vigilante "Wanted" poster, declared the team’s imagined silence "sickening," and fomented hatred by noting the class and economic disparities between the poorer locals from town and the privileged Yankees in gown while never failing to note the races of the accuser and the accused. .
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In Nicaragua, the Volz case became a tabloid sensation with headlines cheering the near lynching of the Gringo. There were declarative statements from prosecutor Peña labeling Volz's alibi as false, as well as misrepresenting evidence, demands for “justice,” cries to not let the Gringo buy his way out, and complaints that "If he were a Nica, they won't have let him out [on home arrest pending trial and after multiple attacks were made against him in jail and outside the courthouse.]." The Snooze Room South would repeatedly emphasis the race, class, outsider issue by refering to Volz as a Mexican-American or employing the slur: "Gringo.".
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Community Uproar
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In Durham, an angry mob assembled around the lacrosse captains' house, banging pots and pans, calling for “justice” while bearing "Castrate!" signs, distributing life-threatening vigilante posters and “fact” sheets full of lies. Victoria Peterson called for the house to be burned to the ground. An armed contingent of the New Black Panther Party approached the Duke campus after declaring their intention to interrogate the lacrosse team. In court and outside the courtroom, members of the NBPP would threaten a wrongfully indicted young man with cries that included, “[You’re a] dead man walking.”
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In Nicaragua, an angry mob, numbering in the hundreds and wielding machetes and clubs, waited outside the courthouse chanting, "Send out the gringo, we'll kill him!"
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In fairness to Nicaragua, it should be noted that there one does have the right to a speedy trial, which is supposedly guaranteed in our Constitution. From his arrest in late November to his conviction in early February, Volz's Nifonging took less time than it has taken Attorney General Roy Cooper's special prosecutors to decide whether to continue the Nifonging that began over one year ago.

Philip Wood
Sources and additional information on the Nifonging of Eric Volz: